Is pixel count all that important?

In digital cameras, the film is replaced by a small sensor chip - either CCD (charged Coupled Device) or CMOS (Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor) - which captures the image in a digital format.

The CCD (or CMOS) sensor surface is divided into tiny squares called pixels, and each pixel captures one segment of an image. The more pixels a sensor has, the more details it can capture and store. While it's true that the number of pixels a CCD contains is an excellent measure of the detail the digital camera can capture, this is not always the case.

To capture an image, light first travels through the lens. It is gathered as electrical charges by the sensor. The sensor, by itself, is incapable of perceiving colours, so it obtains colour data by means of a colour filter arranged above individual pixels. Image data gathered by the sensor is converted into digital signals, which is analysed and processed by the image processor which then gets written out onto a memory card.

How to take quality pictures from the digital camera

Ensure that there is sufficient light in the background

It is recommended that you purchase a digital camera with a built-in flash for night shots. Use the camera's exposure compensation mode if there is too much light in the background.

Use reliable batteries for more pictures

Use long-life lithium batteries, which may cost twice as much, but will last three times longer.

Use the camera's optical viewfinder whenever possible, unless your camera doesn't have one. The LCD screen is handy for reviewing shots, but they can drain batteries in less than 20 minutes. If you are shopping for a camera, consider getting a traditional optical viewfinder as well as an LCD viewfinder.

Turn your camera off between shots.

How to select the right resolution and compression

Resolution is the measurement of an image size in pixels. Since the maximum available resolution of an image is constantly increasing, digital cameras use a process known as "compression" to reduce the data size of the image before it is stored. While this increases the number of pictures you can store on each memory card, there is a trade off in quality.The table on this page has a guide on resolutions and print sizes.

Lens Care

Dirt, dust and fingerprints impact the performance of your lens. And believe it or not, there is a right way and a wrong way to clean a lens. Do it right and you'll maintain peak optical performance. Do it wrong and you could scratch an expensive piece of photographic equipment.

Do you need a flash?

Always consider a flash. Built-in flashes typically produce harsh shadows and edges, unnatural skin tones and "flat", washed-out images. So when using electronic flashes, don't use it head on. Instead, diffuse the flash using various accessories such as bounce cards or soft boxes, or aimed to reflect from other surfaces, also known as "bounce flash".